143 research outputs found
Role of Network Topology in the Synchronization of Power Systems
We study synchronization dynamics in networks of coupled oscillators with
bimodal distribution of natural frequencies. This setup can be interpreted as a
simple model of frequency synchronization dynamics among generators and loads
working in a power network. We derive the minimum coupling strength required to
ensure global frequency synchronization. This threshold value can be
efficiently found by solving a binary optimization problem, even for large
networks. In order to validate our procedure, we compare its results with
numerical simulations on a realistic network describing the European
interconnected high-voltage electricity system, finding a very good agreement.
Our synchronization threshold can be used to test the stability of frequency
synchronization to link removals. As the threshold value changes only in very
few cases when aplied to the European realistic network, we conclude that
network is resilient in this regard. Since the threshold calculation depends on
the local connectivity, it can also be used to identify critical network
partitions acting as synchronization bottlenecks. In our stability experiments
we observe that when a link removal triggers a change in the critical
partition, its limits tend to converge to national borders. This phenomenon,
which can have important consequences to synchronization dynamics in case of
cascading failure, signals the influence of the uncomplete topological
integration of national power grids at the European scale.Comment: The final publication is available at http://www.epj.org (see
http://www.springerlink.com/content/l22k574x25u6q61m/
Evidence for a three-nucleon-force effect in proton-deuteron elastic scattering
Developments in spin-polarized internal targets for storage rings have
permitted measurements of 197 MeV polarized protons scattering from vector
polarized deuterons. This work presents measurements of the polarization
observables A_y, iT_11, and C_y,y in proton-deuteron elastic scattering. When
compared to calculations with and without three-nucleon forces, the
measurements indicate that three-nucleon forces make a significant contribution
to the observables. This work indicates that three-body forces derived from
static nuclear properties appear to be crucial to the description of dynamical
properties.Comment: 8 pages 2 figures Latex, submitted to Phys. Rev. Letter
Minisuperspace Quantization of "Bubbling AdS" and Free Fermion Droplets
We quantize the space of 1/2 BPS configurations of Type IIB SUGRA found by
Lin, Lunin and Maldacena (hep-th/0409174), directly in supergravity. We use the
Crnkovic-Witten-Zuckerman covariant quantization method to write down the
expression for the symplectic structure on this entire space of solutions. We
find the symplectic form explicitly around AdS_5 x S^5 and obtain a U(1)
Kac-Moody algebra, in precise agreement with the quantization of a system of N
free fermions in a harmonic oscillator potential, as expected from AdS/CFT. As
a cross check, we also perform the quantization around AdS_5 x S^5 by another
method, using the known spectrum of physical perturbations around this
background and find precise agreement with our previous calculation.Comment: 22 Pages + 2 Appendices, JHEP3; v3: explanation of factor 2 mismatch
added, references reordered, published versio
On the reheating stage after inflation
We point out that inflaton decay products acquire plasma masses during the
reheating phase following inflation. The plasma masses may render inflaton
decay kinematicaly forbidden, causing the temperature to remain frozen for a
period at a plateau value. We show that the final reheating temperature may be
uniquely determined by the inflaton mass, and may not depend on its coupling.
Our findings have important implications for the thermal production of
dangerous relics during reheating (e.g., gravitinos), for extracting bounds on
particle physics models of inflation from Cosmic Microwave Background
anisotropy data, for the production of massive dark matter candidates during
reheating, and for models of baryogenesis or leptogensis where massive
particles are produced during reheating.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Submitted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Transient domain walls and lepton asymmetry in the Left-Right symmetric model
It is shown that the dynamics of domain walls in Left-Right symmetric models,
separating respective regions of unbroken SU(2)_L and SU(2)_R in the early
universe, can give rise to baryogenesis via leptogenesis. Neutrinos have a
spatially varying complex mass matrix due to CP-violating scalar condensates in
the domain wall. The motion of the wall through the plasma generates a flux of
lepton number across the wall which is converted to a lepton asymmetry by
helicity-flipping scatterings. Subsequent processing of the lepton excess by
sphalerons results in the observed baryon asymmetry, for a range of parameters
in Left-Right symmetric models.Comment: v2 version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D. Discussion in
Introduction and Conclusion sharpened. Equation (12) corrected. 16 pages, 3
figure files, RevTeX4 styl
Solar Wakes of Dark Matter Flows
We analyze the effect of the Sun's gravitational field on a flow of cold dark
matter (CDM) through the solar system in the limit where the velocity
dispersion of the flow vanishes. The exact density and velocity distributions
are derived in the case where the Sun is a point mass. The results are extended
to the more realistic case where the Sun has a finite size spherically
symmetric mass distribution. We find that regions of infinite density, called
caustics, appear. One such region is a line caustic on the axis of symmetry,
downstream from the Sun, where the flow trajectories cross. Another is a
cone-shaped caustic surface near the trajectories of maximum scattering angle.
The trajectories forming the conical caustic pass through the Sun's interior
and probe the solar mass distribution, raising the possibility that the solar
mass distribution may some day be measured by a dark matter detector on Earth.
We generalize our results to the case of flows with continuous velocity
distributions, such as that predicted by the isothermal model of the Milky Way
halo.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figure
Oscillations During Inflation and the Cosmological Density Perturbations
Adiabatic (curvature) perturbations are produced during a period of
cosmological inflation that is driven by a single scalar field, the inflaton.
On particle physics grounds -- though -- it is natural to expect that this
scalar field is coupled to other scalar degrees of freedom. This gives rise to
oscillations between the perturbation of the inflaton field and the
perturbations of the other scalar degrees of freedom, similar to the phenomenon
of neutrino oscillations. Since the degree of the mixing is governed by the
squared mass matrix of the scalar fields, the oscillations can occur even if
the energy density of the extra scalar fields is much smaller than the energy
density of the inflaton field. The probability of oscillation is resonantly
amplified when perturbations cross the horizon and the perturbations in the
inflaton field may disappear at horizon crossing giving rise to perturbations
in scalar fields other than the inflaton. Adiabatic and isocurvature
perturbations are inevitably correlated at the end of inflation and we provide
a simple expression for the cross-correlation in terms of the slow-roll
parameters.Comment: 23 pages, uses LaTeX, added few reference
Detection Limits for Super-Hubble Suppression of Causal Fluctuations
We investigate to what extent future microwave background experiments might
be able to detect a suppression of fluctuation power on large scales in flat
and open universe models. Such suppression would arise if fluctuations are
generated by causal processes, and a measurement of a small suppression scale
would be problematic for inflation models, but consistent with many defect
models. More speculatively, a measurement of a suppression scale of the order
of the present Hubble radius could provide independent evidence for a
fine-tuned inflation model leading to a low-density universe. We find that,
depending on the primordial power spectrum, a suppression scale modestly larger
than the visible Horizon can be detected, but that the detectability drops very
rapidly with increasing scale. For models with two periods of inflation, there
is essentially no possibility of detecting a causal suppression scale.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, revtex, In Press Physical Review D 200
Limits on the gravity wave contribution to microwave anisotropies
We present limits on the fraction of large angle microwave anisotropies which
could come from tensor perturbations. We use the COBE results as well as
smaller scale CMB observations, measurements of galaxy correlations, abundances
of galaxy clusters, and Lyman alpha absorption cloud statistics. Our aim is to
provide conservative limits on the tensor-to-scalar ratio for standard
inflationary models. For power-law inflation, for example, we find T/S<0.52 at
95% confidence, with a similar constraint for phi^p potentials. However, for
models with tensor amplitude unrelated to the scalar spectral index it is still
currently possible to have T/S>1.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D.
Calculations extended to blue spectral index, Fig. 6 added, discussion of
results expande
Current Status of Simulations
As the title suggests, the purpose of this chapter is to review the current
status of numerical simulations of black hole accretion disks. This chapter
focuses exclusively on global simulations of the accretion process within a few
tens of gravitational radii of the black hole. Most of the simulations
discussed are performed using general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
schemes, although some mention is made of Newtonian radiation MHD simulations
and smoothed particle hydrodynamics. The goal is to convey some of the exciting
work that has been going on in the past few years and provide some speculation
on future directions.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the ISSI-Bern
workshop on "The Physics of Accretion onto Black Holes" (8-12 October 2012
- …